Bebop dronemaker Parrot this week announced a modeling bundle, targeted at professional real estate and building professionals.

The $1,099 Bebop-Pro 3D Modeling bundle claims to be “a high-performance tool to develop innovative marketing content like commercial videos and 3D interactive models, or to capture measurements for cost estimates or 3D model printing,” according to a news release. The product will be made available in May 2017.

Essentially, it’s a Parrot Bebop 2 with Skycontroller that also comes with a Pix4D license, some spare batteries and a backpack.

Here is the thing: the package doesn’t actually save you that much money. For $1,099, you would get:

Do the math, and the whole setup minus backpack costs $1,090 if purchased separately. Basically, this deal is netting you a free backpack. Nothing against free backpacks, but that’s essentially what this whole new product offering is.

Parrot, famous for making the first consumer drone, the AR.drone , acquired 3D digital mapping company Pix4D in 2012. Pix4D is certainly an interesting tool, allowing users to define an area to map. The Bebop 2 then flies over that zone based on its own optimized flight plan, collects images and data autonomously, and within 30 minutes analyzes the images and converts them into a 3D model. The Pix4D software is behind plenty of cool projects, including this high resolution model of the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Parrot is not the only company to repackage its drones that suffered less-than-ideal sales as an enterprise solution. Berkeley-based startup 3D Robotics famously repositioned itself as an enterprise-focused company. It now sells its Solo drone for upwards of $12,175, repackaged now as an enterprise drone that comes with a Sony R10C camera, gimbal, and one year subscription to Site Scan, a piece of software that calculates and flies a flight path, integrating with Autodesk to create 3D models.

3DR originally positioned itself as a consumer drone company in competition with DJI. The company’s “$100 million blunder based on ineptitude” caused massive layoffs. The once $1,000 Solo drone can now be found on Amazon (without Site Scan of course), for just $260.